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The Introduction Article is just the first of 11 articles in each species account that provide life history information for the species. The remaining articles provide detailed information regarding distribution, migration, habitat, diet, sounds, behavior, breeding, current population status and conservation. Each species account also includes a multimedia section that displays the latest photos, audio selections and videos from Macaulay Library’s extensive galleries. Written and continually updated by acknowledged experts on each species, Birds of North America accounts include a comprehensive bibliography of published research on the species.

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Figure 1. Distribution of the Tennessee Warbler.

Adult male Tennessee Warbler, Kidder Co., ND, 26 May.

Adult males are striking warblers; note the clean white underparts, grayish head with dark eyeline, and contrasting bright green back. The following is a link to this photographer's website: http://www.flickr.com/photos/pinicola/.

The Tennessee Warbler's loud, staccato song often signals the peak of spring songbird migration in eastern North America. Described by Alexander Wilson in 1811 from a migrant specimen on the banks of Tennessee's Cumberland River, its common name belies the fact that its breeding range is restricted almost entirely to the boreal forest zone of Canada, extending into southeastern Alaska and the extreme northern fringe of the United States. Most migrants move along the eastern seaboard east of the Mississippi Valley, crossing the Gulf of Mexico to and from wintering grounds in Central and northern South America.

Numbers of transients and breeders fluctuate markedly from year to year, often in response to periodic outbreaks of spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana) caterpillars, on which the species is a well-documented specialist. Breeding-population densities recorded during budworm epidemics may exceed 500 males/100 ha, and Tennessee Warblers often rank as the most abundant breeding species in boreal forests of eastern Canada. Long-term (30-year) continental census data show no significant population increases overall, and the species is probably more abundant now than it was in the nineteenth century, because of its exploitation of budworm outbreaks and use of successional habitats following commercial logging operations.

Surprisingly few detailed studies of the breeding ecology of Tennessee Warblers have been conducted, and Chapman's (
Chapman, F. M. 1907b. The warblers of North America. New York: D. Appleton & Company.
Chapman 1907b: 85) assertion that the Tennessee Warbler awaits a biographer still rings true. The species inhabits remote areas, its nests are difficult to find, and no systematic study of marked populations has been attempted. Although most aspects of the species breeding behavior and demography remain poorly known, the wintering biology of the Tennessee Warbler is better understood. Several studies (e.g., Tramer and Kemp
Tramer, E. J. and T. R. Kemp. 1979. Diet correlated variations in social behavior of wintering Tennessee warblers (Vermivora peregrina). Auk no. 96:186-187.
Tramer and Kemp 1979,
Tramer, E. J. and T. R. Kemp. 1980. "Foraging ecology of migrant and resident warblers and vireos in the highlands of Costa Rica." In Migrant birds in the Neotropics: ecology, behavior, distribution and conservation., edited by A. Keast and E. S. Morton, 285-297. Washington, DC: Smithson. Inst. Press.
Tramer and Kemp 1980,
Morton, E. S. 1980. "Adaptations to seasonal changes by migrant land birds in the Panama Canal Zone." In Migrant birds in the neotropics., edited by A. Keast and E. S. Morton, 437-456. Washington, D.C: Smithson. Inst. Press.
Morton 1980) examining its winter habitat use, foraging ecology, and social behavior have shown considerable plasticity and seasonal variation in this species.

A. Skutch (in
Bent, A. C. 1953b. Life histories of North American wood warblers. U. S. Natl. Mus. Bull. no. 203.
Bent 1953b) suggested that the species would be more appropriately named coffee warbler, because of the strong affinity of wintering individuals for coffee plantations in Central America. Recent studies have affirmed the importance of shade coffee plantations for Tennessee Warblers, especially during the winter dry season (Greenberg and Bichier in press).

The species regularly migrates southward during the main period of its Prebasic flight-feather molt, a phenomenon that is exceptional among North American passerines and merits further study.

Formerly placed in the geni Vermivora and Setophaga, the Tennessee Warbler is now considered part of Oreothlypis, based on recent genetic studies.